MI5 was ‘unprepared’ for 7/7 bombings - former spy

Britain’s domestic intelligence agency was unprepared for London’s 7/7 bombings, a former agent has revealed. He said that MI5 was understaffed and that it had generally been ill-equipped for a rise in Islamic terror following 9/11.

The agent, who uses the codename Robert Acott, made the claims anonymously to BBC’s Newsnight program. The ex-spy mentioned that the agency was understaffed at the time of the London terror attacks in July 2005, which struck the capital’s transport system leaving 52 people dead.

Acott, who worked as a spy for 18 years following Islamist and Irish terror suspects, told the BBC that MI5 had been unprepared for the rise in Islamist terror following the 9/11 terror attacks in the US.

He added that he was abandoned by MI5 after developing acute Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and a dependency on alcohol. The intelligence agency did not comment on the claims, but sources told the BBC it was only one side of the story.

In an unprecedented interview, the former MI5 agent revealed details about the lives of MI5’s foot soldiers for the first time.

He told the BBC that the secretive intelligence agency was short staffed at the time of the 7/7 bombings in London, when four suicide bombers detonated explosives on three separate Underground trains and a bus.

Acott’s comments appear to undermine a testimony from MI5’s Chief of Staff, which was made in 2011. “Witness G” anonymously told the July 7 inquests that the agency had experienced no intelligence failings in the run up to the attack.

Acott said MI5 was completely unprepared for the rise of Islamist terror after the 9/11 attacks in the United States and that it only had one Muslim spy in its surveillance unit.

“(MI5) was totally understaffed. We weren't used to dealing with the way they acted. The good thing about following Irish targets was that the Active Service Units would generally meet in pubs you could go into,” he said.

“The Islamic targets would meet round each other's houses or in mosques which you can't get away with going into. Also, they were living in mostly ethnic areas and often you would find the only white people on the street were surveillance officers.”

MI5 had so few non-white officers that they considered “blacking-up” agents and even tried it on a training exercise.

BBC Journalist Nick Hopkins reports Acott said it would have taken a “small army” to adequately monitor all the suspected terrorists in the UK.